Page Six Has Device To Detect Icebergs French Inventor To Make Tests of Ap- Electrification of Navy Vessels Held Efficiency Move The Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon. Daughter Sides With Stillman Tuesday, July 5jlJn By Charles E. Hughes U. S. S. New Mexico.. Flagship Cal., July 6- "We learned Pacific Fleet, Los Angeles Harbor, many things during the recent war The most pertinent of all nsirnr.llR Made Alter this knowledge is that the Amer- " Years of Effort lean navy must be 100 per cent efficient at all times to be really efficient at all Paris. July 5. A device to guard ships against approaching or distant Icebergs Is claimed to have been found by M. Irigaldine of the French Society of Eletcri cluns. Ever since the Titantic disaster In 1912, this Inventor has been -working on a scheme whereby Ice bergs will be visible at many miles distance. Experiments conducted off the north coast of Newfound land aboard a French gunboat are said to have been conclusive tho not absolutely perfect. In working on his invention M. Larlgaldle considered the dangers of icebergs to shipping and the delays and ex penses incurred by ships having to take more southerly courses dur ing cold weather. If his Invention proves successful the Inventor clalmst hat ships will henceforth be able to navigate In more nor therly watcrB and. he hopes there by to reduce both the danger of crone-Atlantic travel and the time neded to make the crossing. The apparatus M. Larlgaldle employs on his trials consisted of glided parabolical mirror, which ean freely oscillate around Its horizontal diameter. A heavy lead weight reduces Its period of oscil lation so as to render is Insensible to the rolling of the ship. The axle of the apparatus directed toward the bow of the ship directly cuts the horlson. In the center of tha mirror a special thermoelectrical coupling 'Is placed, which, care fully calorlfled. Is protected by sylvine, a highly transparent sub stance. Despite serious difficulties due In soma measure to the nar row surface of the mirror. It was possible to notice a diminution of the current produced by the titer mo-electrlcal coupling when an Ice berg crossed the horizon at a dis tance of six knots. Expecting offi cial aid. M. Larlgaldle Is fully con fident he can greatly Improve his apparatus ami mat u win ue riii-. Irilv adonted bv all ocean going . I ships. Reno Has New Way to Assign i Divorce Cases Reno, Nev, July S Picking out your favoflte Judse to hear the merits of your case has been a favorite Indoor sport of the divorce colony here, it Is said, following a conference of Judges Moran and Lunsford and E. II. Heemer, the county clerk. The conference was made neces aary heeause of the alleged arbi trary selection by certain attor-i neys of the Judges to hear their cases. The practice has grown to such large proportions that It has become distasteful to the Washoe county judges, anil has led to a revision of the system used in as signing divorce rases after they were filed. Up to the present time assign ments to the two departments have automatically been made as cases were filed with even num bers going Into one department and odd numbers Into another. It ia said that some attorneys have held back cases of their clients for several days In order that the next number on the register might be favorable and the rase be iet be fore the "favorite" judge. At taches of the clerk's offie-j hav, been kept busy answering tele phone calls as to the next number on the register. The conference of the Judges and clerks resulted In a change of system which will make It Impos sible to foretell which Judge will preside when a rase Is railed Hereafter all cases as filed will be assigned by drawing numbers from a box. t'sing this system it will not he possible to tell which de partment will have a rase electricity runs machines that peel potatoes, wash dishes, mix dougn, cut butter and mold it into per fect shapes, all exactly alike, and bake bread. In the laundry elec trical machines wash and dry clothes. Duplication of Utilities In the depths of the ship are the great motors that provide the driving power. And in every partj A naval officer recently maae, ot me great neuuus this remark to me during a con- lights that feed on electric cur versatlon aboard the superdread-, rent. naught New Mexico, where I had The New Mexico is said to con a remarkable opportunity to notel tain 75.000 miles of electric wir for a few days the routine of a'ing. The superdreadnaught is great capital ship. therefore so scientifically fitted, Every sailor and officer on the and its construction so up to date New Mexico, as well as of the' that any order can be executed In . . .... - - it. 4 . rAu, mlmiiDR after it has been wnoie racnic neei ir mai mm- - ; , - i ter. takes a great pride In hack-, nasniu in u i.. AHmiml Hmlmnn'n iWIr- Great care ratlnn that "shin frtr shin, t he 1 all t he d eslgns American navy Is without a su-i and war equipment, to have prac perior on the world's seas." I tlcally everything duplicated. brief outline vvunin a lew - uuun mmi ,u...- vital equipment Is put out 01 com mission In time of battle, Its ef fort could be duplicated with an other device. The total horsepower energy re quired tqoperate the New Mexico Is 32,480. There are seven oil burning boilers, fed by slightly warmed fuel under pressure. Each boiler has seven burners, and It On the New Mexico electricity takes oniy tne turn 01 a sere lu hoists the ammunition, rotates the "ring a boiler Into commission, huge turrets, operates the fourteen The great flagship has two main Inch guns, steers the ship, raises ; turbine generators, each with 17, and lowers the anchors, pumps 1 OOOhorse power. The generators fresh and salt water, disposes of i make 2100 revolutions a minute, sewage, compresses and heats air, The current they generate is con- onerates the mach nerv and tools " l" """ ""'" "TT- wiin a eapatiiy has been taken in finished machines In this article will be given of the New Mexico's mechanical equipment which is regarded the best In the navies of the world. Electric Throughout The New Mexico Is practically controlled at all times by elec trical devices, and Is generally re ferred to among American naval men as "the electrical ship." 1 KSsiBslsHlsHHmP Jti 1Hss9sHsbsHBsI ' M II I Still tvatj W -.- shop and printing establishment, horse power. I nese rnou-rs Ufmy or receni cruises snow mat MrgeSt Electricity Is the medium for l"c '" tmj , Uu....6 w ... ih. inirini. Inierenm- propellors, giving the huge sea America, the superdreadnaught munlcatlng systems of the ship, 1 monster 21 knots an hour when Including the many telephones running full speed, which keep the officers In con- Marked Cleanliness stant touch with the crew; oper- Officers of the New Mexico ates the fire protection system and claim the electrically driven pro supplies the artificial cooling sys-ipellors are vastly superior to the tern with refrigerating power. ! steam driven propellors In the In" the various cooking galleys saving of fuel. The vessel's logs Miss Anne Stillman, the beautiful daughter of James A. Still man and Mrs. Anne Urguhart Stillman, who has taken sides with her father in his against her mother. She is a sister of "Bud" Stillman, who says of her: "I can't understand girls. I'm sorry for Sis. She seems to think father is a Lily White' angel." Yonnz Stillman is standing by his mother. Her said: "It seems a hard thing to say, but I can no longer recognize the man who is attacking my mother as my father." Champion Plays In England x - x-smsHHIbHL jfftHBJHf i? " tffl1! S: . ? I II WMHMI Idaho burned 213 tons ot oil; the New Mexico. 110, and the Missis sippi, another superdreadnaught, 192 tons. All other daily records showed about the same ratio in fuel burned. One of the effective arguments In favor of the "electric ship," aside from economy, of operation, Is cleanliness. The New Mexico is free of dirt In the turbine or furnace rooms, and it has the ap pearance of a ship In commission but a few days, instead of having been operated three years. Oreat economy Is practiced In the use of the steam. The ex haust steam coming from the tur bine generators is used In the op eration of auxiliary equipment. Then It Is put Into evaporator colls and distills sea water Into fresh water. About 25,000 gallons of ocean water is converted Into fresh water on the New Mexico every day. This is used for all general purposes, from drinking to laundry work. The J. A. tlordon Lumber com pany's mill, south ot Klamath Falls, was burned Wednesday night. The plant was valued at $30,000. Watch Is Exhibited by Government Washington, July 5. The largest watch ever known to be manufactured is being exhibited in the priceless collection of the government and housed in the na tional museum. It was manufac tured by a big watch making com pany of Lancaster, Pa., and was loaned to the government for two months for exhibition purposes. This! mastodon among chronom eters measures 19 inches in di ameter is 1 inches thick and has a main spring 9 feet long. It is an exact duplicate of the standard 23-jewel watch of commerce, the jewels being synthetic stones. The timepiece was constructed at a cost of $500 and represents some of the finest workmanship of its kind in the country. The "train' the wheels run in. is of solid gold with the coks in the teeth treated specially to harden them against wear. The winding wheel Is of steel. Although it has a nine-foot mainspring, the watch Is run by a weight. Black Gowns Latest Fad To Sweep Europe Bv Newton C. Parke. Paris, July 5. All feminine b.,.. i suddenly turning to black gowns and the women who flaunts bright colors feels distinct ly out of place. The running of the Prix de Di ane at the reopening of the Chan tilly race course was the most fashionable event of the summer on the continent. Promenading before the stands were thousands of the elite of Paris, London, New York and scores of other cities and fullv 90 ner cent of them were in black. The wave of sombreness has struck Uerlin, Koine, Vienna and all other European capitals. Edouard Ponti, noted French writer, thinks he knows the reason why. Fashionable dressmakers did not launch this mode deliberately, for it takes money out of their pockets." says Ponti. "A woman must have many gayly-colored dresses, because they are conspicu ous and the same color cannot be worn every day, whereas she may do very well with two or three gowns in black. "It is not a measure of econ omy. Women are spending more money in Europe than at any time excepting the period immediately following the conclusion of peace. "It is simply the natural re action against the wave of jazz band sayety that followed the ar mistice when evetything was brightly colored. It is a historical fact that some mysterious link connects women s fashions With the prevailing attitude of the pub lic mind. After the armistice, noise, champagne, reds and yel lows. Today sober second thought and realization that the world is still full of trouble, less noise and darning, sombre gowns. "If, In the near future, Europe heroines more stable and life ev erywhere returns to normal you will see lively colors reappear in the feminine toilette." JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY. JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY STOP THAT ITCH! Purify Your Blood Eczema, tetter and many other skin troubles are duo to disordered blood. If you are afflicted with skin trouble, don't sutler the maddening tortura longer, but start right away to purify your blood with S. S. S. the standard blood purifier for over 60 years. For Spscal Booklet or lor indi vidual advice, without charge, write Chief Medical Advitor, S.S.S.Co .Dep't 430, Atlanta, Ga. Cat S. S. S. at your druggist. S.S.S. The Standard Blood Purifim Mrs. Molla BJurstedt Mallory. American woman tennis cham pion, photographed In artlon during the recent women's tennis tournament at Iterkenham. England. Mrs. Mallory was eliminated by Mrs. Heamlsh. ot England. In the semi-final round. The tournament was won by Miss KM r.aheth Ryan, of altfornla, who defeated Mrs. Mallory' conqueror In the finals. Beauty of Skin Enhanced by Cuticura When used for every -day toilet pur poses Cuticura keeps the complex ton fresh and dear, hands soft and white and hair live and glossy. Tho Soap to cleanae and purify, theuint lent to soothe and heal and the Talcum to powder and perfume. - - ' - A i, - suartaL tmpl tti Mil it mm - SiMiigl haliati ObMSaaSi TatnaSfc JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY JOURNAL WANT ADS PAT. JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY Will u Have A lift' If you have reason to believe, as many have, that a change from coffee or tea would be wise, try Postum Cereal You'll find what thousands of others have fbiind complete sat isfaction to taste, and freedom from harm to nerves or digestion When coffee or tea disturbs, it's easy to get up where you belong, J 'There's a Reason" Sold by grocers everywhere Madetrv Pbstum Cereal Co, be Here's why CAMELS are the quality cigarette BECAUSE we put the utmost quality into this one brand. Camels are as good as it's pos sible for skill, money and lifelong knowledge of fine tobaccos to make a cigarette. Nothing is too good for Camels. And bear this in mind! Everything is done to make Camels the best cigarette it's possible to buy. Nothing is done simply for show. Take the Camel package for instance. It's the most perfect packing science can devise to pro tect cigarettes and keep them fresh. Heavy paper secure foil wrapping revenue stamp to seal the fold and make the package air-tight. But there's nothing flashy about it You'll find no extra wrappers. No frills or furbelows. Such things do not improve the smoke any more than premiums or coupons. And remember you inust pay their extra cost or get lowered quality. If you want the smoothest, mellowest, mildest cigarette you can imagine and one entirely free from cigaretty aftertaste, It's Camels for you. Camel K J- KFTNOIDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Wiwto-S.Wm, H. C Merchandise i Merit Guaranteed The Part Honor Plays When Buyers Quit Consumer Advantage Get a Guarantee Lower Prices AN EDITORIAL ON BUYING The advertising of merchan dise is the consumers' guarantee of merit. In his advertising the manu facturer, over his own name, makes claims for his goods which must he lived up to. Con sumers look for the qualities ad vertised, and if they fail to find them promptly transfer their patronage to another brand. Advertising is a two-edged sword. It gives the consumers the advantage of knowing ex actly who disappoints them. No one realizes this more keenly than the manufacturer. So with him it is a principle of good busi ness as well as honor to make his goods measure up to his adver tising claims. Manufacturers, brought con stantly before the public by their advertised goods, are usu ally men of high character, who make their goods as represent ed. But in addition to this, the educational force of advertising is such that the consumer is as sured of honesty and quality be cause every reputable publica tion and advertising agency de mands it. When the consumer buys unadvertised goods, he gives up all these guarantees. He has no 'protection whatever, neither name nor assur ance stands back of the product he buys. If it is poor, he has no recourse. He does not know who has cheated him. The dealer is only the intermediary. He, himself, may have been cheated in the goods. In buying advertised products, the consumer makes sure of goods manufactured On honor and sold on honor. 'He has the price advantage that comes from the big market built by the manufacturer's advertising which by increas ing the output decreases the cost of each pack age or article, and enables the manufacturer to take a smaller individual profit on account of his great volume of business. Fm every standpoint, the consumer is the gainer in buying advertised goods.